Boo for intel graphics... With the rest of the specs, you'd think they'd put in a chip that allows you to play SOME games... Other than solitaire that is...

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The Ivy Bridge architecture improves mostly this other than moving to a smaller process, and the sandy bridge chips weren't really a slouch in this department. Their drivers may not be on par with AMD or nVidia, but the GPU itself is - it seems like it will be competitive with lower end APU designs in terms of raw power, though probably still slower than midrange or higher end APU GPUs.

Anyways, it looks like a decent machine at an unappetizing price. Sure the chip is probably a higher end one and while it may be thinner or lighter for a 17" laptop... it's not exactly thin or light. It's interesting that the pic specs differ from the news article somewhat, claiming a very low resolution (1366x768) and HD 3000 graphics (which is sandy bridge generation). My guess is the news post is the accurate one, but maybe it's an indication of the page being made prematurely (it was obviously published prematurely), or that the specs listed can't exactly be trusted.

This is a joke right? How else would you rearrange a keyboard, screen, and trackpad on a hunk of metal? Would they be better off putting the trackpad where the screen is and the keyboard sideways with the screen underneath the machine?

This is a joke right? How else would you rearrange a keyboard, screen, and trackpad on a hunk of metal? Would they be better off putting the trackpad where the screen is and the keyboard sideways with the screen underneath the machine?

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Samsung can start by not using backlit black chiclet keys that look exactly like the ones on a MBP, not using a trackpad that looks exactly like the one on a MBP and not having the exact same notch for lid opening.

I mean, look at it, it's pretty obvious that Samsung is trying to attract potential MBP buyers by, well, making something that looks like a MBP.

This is a joke right? How else would you rearrange a keyboard, screen, and trackpad on a hunk of metal? Would they be better off putting the trackpad where the screen is and the keyboard sideways with the screen underneath the machine?

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check pron's post. it is pretty obvious who they are trying to cater to. not saying it is a bad thing, just pointing out the obvious lack of creativity.

Samsung can start by not using backlit black chiclet keys that look exactly like the ones on a MBP, not using a trackpad that looks exactly like the one on a MBP and not having the exact same notch for lid opening.